Mount Mantalingajan | |
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Mount Mantalingajan as seen from Ransang, 4 July 2007 |
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Elevation | 2,085 m (6,841 ft) [1] |
Prominence | 2,085 m (6,841 ft) [1] |
Listing | Ultra |
Location | |
Mount Mantalingajan
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Range | Mantalingahan Range |
Mount Mantalingajan (or Mantalingahan or Mantaling) is a mountain in southern Palawan, Philippines, that forms the highest part of the Mount Beaufort Ultramafics geological region, a series of ultramafic outcrops of Eocene origin, of which Mount Victoria forms the largest contiguous land area. The peak of the mountain is the highest point on Palawan.[2]
The mountain forms the center of the Mt. Mantalingahan Protected Landscape (MMPL), a national park park covering the entire Mantalingahan Mountain Range. The protected area status of MMPL was proclaimed last June 23, 2009, by virtue of Proclamation No. 1815 by President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. The protected area covers an area of 120,457 hectares.[3]
Continuing discoveries of new species of plant and animal from the mountain highlight its tremendous ecological value and the importance of maintaining such protective zones in the face of constant logging and mining pressures.[4] The pitcher plant species, Nepenthes mantalingajanensis, described in 2007, is named after the mountain itself.[5]
Mt. Mantalingajan is one of the most difficult climbs in the Philippines, being graded Difficulty 9/9 by local mountaineering website PinoyMountaineer.com. The usual route starts from Barangay Ransang in Rizal on the south-west coast of Palawan. Three days hiking is required to reach the summit and two days to return to the jump-off, a total of five days, unless another day is wanted exploring the summit and surrounds. Highlights of the trail include encounters with the Tau't Bato tribe and the "Knife Edge" Canopy Walk that leads to the summit.[6]